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Seaman Stuns Junction City in Football

The Seaman Vikings ( 3-4 ) used a controlling ground attack and their offensive line controlled the line of scrimmage enroute to a 21-20 victory over the Junction City Blue Jays ( 4-3 ) Friday night.

The loss for Junction City came one week after a big win over third-ranked Manhattan.

Junction City coach Randall Zimmerman agreed Seaman dominated running the football against the Blue Jays. “Lack of emotion, lack of intensity, lack of physicality, lack of competitiveness from us. ” Zimmerman said the message to the team this week was that the win over Manhattan could not be allowed to defeat the Blue Jays against Seaman. The coach noted Junction City did not practice well this week.

Russell Wilkey ran 27 yards for a touchdown and caught a 24-yard touchdown pass from Rooster Adams in the game. Junction City hosts Emporia next Friday.

High School Football Scores

PREP FOOTBALL=

Andale 55, Clearwater 6

Andover Central 16, Andover 14

Arkansas City 34, Valley Center 20

Ashland 62, Rolla 12

Attica/Argonia 38, Medicine Lodge 9

Augusta 34, Abilene 27

Axtell 76, Frankfort 28

BV North 51, BV Northwest 7

BV Randolph 36, Doniphan West 12

BV West 53, BV Southwest 6

Basehor-Linwood 34, Atchison 7

Belle Plaine 27, Eureka 26, OT

Beloit 16, Concordia 6

Bennington 54, Herington 6

Bonner Springs 55, Leavenworth 34

Burlington 36, Osawatomie 0

Cair Paravel 46, Veritas Christian 0

Canton-Galva 38, Solomon 20

Central Plains 52, Moundridge 0

Centralia 52, Wabaunsee 14

Centre 48, Rural Vista 0

Chapman 38, Hesston 28

Chase County 68, Valley Falls 18

Cheney 37, Wichita Trinity 15

Cherryvale 28, Neodesha 12

Cheylin 60, Natoma 14

Cimarron 60, Lyons 0

Circle 40, Independence 34

Clay Center 27, Rock Creek 21

Clifton-Clyde 52, Washington County 6

Coffeyville 40, Chanute 24

Conway Springs 53, Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 23

DeSoto 14, Shawnee Heights 0

Derby 48, Wichita Campus 13

Dighton 50, Quinter 0

Dodge City 27, Garden City 7

Douglass 42, Fredonia 21

Elkhart 51, Stanton County 8

Ell-Saline 14, Salina Sacred Heart 9

Fort Scott 28, Bolivar, Mo. 27

Frontenac 33, Baxter Springs 0

Galena 38, Columbus 0

Garden Plain 52, Wichita Independent 12

Girard 21, Iola 13

Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 70, Linn 44

Goodland 29, Russell 26

Great Bend 35, Liberal 6

Greeley County 30, Wallace County 28, OT

Hanover 52, Wetmore 6

Hays-TMP-Marian 14, Minneapolis 7

Hillsboro 66, Bluestem 22

Hodgeman County 54, Spearville 8

Hoxie 52, Oberlin-Decatur 6

Hugoton 23, Larned 7

Humboldt 64, Northeast-Arma 6

Hutchinson 45, Salina South 24

Hutchinson Central Christian 72, Stafford 26

Hutchinson Trinity 24, Remington 6

Inman 28, Meade 27

Jackson Heights 38, Jefferson North 8

Jayhawk Linn 40, Erie 0

Jefferson West 41, Wellsville 6

KC Schlagle 44, KC Washington 15

KC Sumner 26, KC Harmon 20

Kapaun Mount Carmel 25, St. James Academy 0

Kingman 31, Nickerson 14

La Crosse 24, Oakley 22

Lakin 38, Sterling 22

Lansing 55, KC Turner 7

Lawrence Free State 36, SM East 30

Little River 50, St. John 0

Louisburg 25, Ottawa 0

Macksville 50, Pratt Skyline 36

Madison/Hamilton 26, Burlingame 24

Maize 48, Salina Central 26

Maize South 23, Goddard 22, 2OT

Manhattan 56, Topeka West 6

Maranatha Academy 24, Lebo 20

Marmaton Valley 22, Altoona-Midway 14

Marysville 6, Holton 0

Maur Hill – Mount Academy 38, Pleasant Ridge 22

McLouth 54, Central Heights 14

McPherson 57, Rose Hill 7

Mill Valley 18, Blue Valley 7

Minneola 92, Ingalls 80

Mission Valley 22, St. Mary’s 8

Mulvane 41, El Dorado 6

Nemaha Central 50, Atchison County 0

Ness City 62, Kiowa County 14

Newton 32, Goddard-Eisenhower 7

Norton 35, Ellsworth 17

Olathe North 48, Lawrence 23

Olpe 54, Marion 0

Osborne 68, Northern Valley 0

Oswego 22, Cedar Vale/Dexter 16

Otis-Bison 70, Chase 6

Paola 35, Eudora 0

Parsons 42, Caney Valley 22

Pawnee Heights 41, Moscow 27

Peabody-Burns 54, Goessel 52

Phillipsburg 51, Hoisington 21

Pittsburg 28, Olathe East 21

Pittsburg Colgan 46, Pleasanton 0

Plainville 41, Ellis 0

Prairie View 22, Anderson County 7

Pratt 51, Holcomb 15

Pretty Prairie 28, Norwich 20

Riverside 36, Horton 0

Riverton 22, Southeast 8

Rock Hills 50, Pike Valley 6

Rossville 43, Council Grove 8

Royal Valley 28, Hiawatha 12

SM South 38, Olathe Northwest 21

Sabetha 56, Wamego 0

Santa Fe Trail 64, KC Bishop Ward 8

Scott City 35, Colby 12

Sedan 44, Burden Central 22

Sedgwick 59, Sublette 14

Silver Lake 48, Osage City 26

Smith Center 57, Republic County 8

Smoky Valley 20, Halstead 14

South Barber 70, Burrton 8

South Central 52, Oxford 0

South Gray 51, Kinsley 14

South Haven 45, Fairfield-Cunningham 0

Southeast Saline 23, Riley County 21

Southern Coffey 46, Crest 0

Southwestern Hts. 56, Ellinwood 28

Spring Hill 24, KC Piper 22

St. Francis 64, Trego 14

St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 60, Lakeside 0

St. Paul 72, Chetopa 22

St. Thomas Aquinas 41, Bishop Miege 21

Stockton 54, Lincoln 6

Sylvan-Lucas 48, Logan/Palco 0

Thunder Ridge 50, Wilson 6

Tonganoxie 20, Baldwin 0

Topeka 27, Emporia 26

Topeka Hayden 20, Perry-Lecompton 0

Topeka Seaman 21, Junction City 20

Triplains-Brewster 54, Wheatland-Grinnell 6

Troy 35, Lyndon 0

Udall 62, Caldwell 42

Ulysses 35, Labette County 22

Valley Heights 38, Northern Heights 0

Victoria 42, Hill City 41

Wakefield 58, Marais des Cygnes Valley 0

Wellington 22, Winfield 7

West Franklin def. Oskaloosa, forfeit

Wichita Bishop Carroll 39, Wichita North 19

Wichita Collegiate 46, Haven 8

Wichita County 50, Rawlins County 0

Wichita East 41, Wichita Southeast 0

Wichita Home School 88, Wichita Sunrise 66

Wichita Northwest 65, Wichita Heights 26

Wichita West 57, Wichita South 21

Yates Center 7, Uniontown 6

Weeklong Rains Reduce Parking for Oklahoma State Game

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – With the Manhattan area experiencing more than five inches of rain over the past week, K-State Athletics officials announced Thursday that parking in some of the grass lots around Bill Snyder Family Stadium will be reduced for Saturday’s game against Oklahoma State due to wet and muddy conditions.

 

With additional rain forecasted for Friday, little or no improvement in the ground conditions is expected before Saturday’s 11 a.m., Homecoming contest.

 

The Ag and Grain Sciences parking lots north of the stadium will have limited availability for parking. Only about 250 of the normal 1,000 spaces in the Ag Lot will be available. All grass parking at the Grain Sciences area has been closed; only parking in the paved areas will be accessible.

 

Lot 9 east of the stadium is expected to operate at full capacity. Also, parking for recreational vehicles north of the KSU Foundation will be open for business as normal. Athletics officials suggested fans utilize the Equine Lot north of the fire station off Denison Avenue, where 1,000 vehicles can be accommodated. Cost at the Equine Lot is $20.

 

On campus, parking is available at the KSU Parking Garage (no tailgating allowed), and the following lots: B16 and B17 north of Weber Hall; A17 and A18 north of Waters Hall; B5, east of Vet Med; B11 and B13, near Dole Hall; B4, north of Call Hall, and A1, A2 and A3 at the corner of Manhattan and Bluemont. For a campus map, click here. Tailgating is not permitted in campus parking lots.

 

For those parking on campus, a free shuttle service sponsored by the K-State Union and K-State Campus Store is available beginning two hours prior to kickoff from the south circle on 17th Street, between the K-State Parking Garage and the Union. Passengers will be dropped off near the Quick Cats convenience store in the Jardine Plaza Neighborhood southeast of the stadium. Return trips resume with five minutes remaining in the third quarter and continue until approximately one hour after the game.

 

The Manhattan public transit system, aTa Bus, also runs a gameday shuttle on its routes. For more information, go to www.flinthillsatabus.com or call 785-537-6345.

 

All parking lots around Bill Snyder Family Stadium will open at 6 a.m., five hours prior to kickoff.  Parking in the east and west lots of the stadium is reserved for members of the Ahearn Fund and requires a pass for entry. Paid parking for fans with disabilities is available on a first-come, first-served basis at $20 in the east and west stadium lots. To gain entry, guests must display a state-issued accessible license plate or hangtag and present a disability card along with a form of personal identification.

– k-statesports.com –

RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football and Golf Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

Friday Night High School Football Schedule

The Friday night high school football schedule finds:

–Junction City at Seaman

–Manhattan plays Topeka West at Hummer Sports Park in the capitol city

–Topeka High travels to Emporia

–Wamego visits Sabetha

–Hayden hosts Perry-Lecompton

–Chapman hosts Hesston

–Abilene is home against Augusta

–Southeast of Saline goes to Riley County

–Solomon goes to Canton-Galva

–Blue Valley Randolph travels to Doniphan West

–Centre hosts Rural Vista

–Wakefield hosts Marais Des Cygne Valley

Mark Williams, Ricky Schissler Win PBA50 Regional Titles in Junction City

Junction City, Kan., (Oct. 9, 2018) – PBA Hall of Famer Mark Williams from Beaumont, Texas, and Ricky Schissler of Brighton, Colo., won titles in a pair of joint PBA50 Southwest/Midwest Regional events over the weekend at Junction City Bowl.

 

On Saturday, Williams defeated Team USA competitor and new PBA member Steve Badovinac of Parker Colo., 224-192, to win his 21st PBA title. Badovinac started the championship match strong with four strikes, but two late open frames allowed a late charge by Williams to win the match and the $1,200 first place check.

 

On Sunday, Schissler, who won the same event in 2017 for his first PBA title, won six of his seven matches in the eight-game round robin match play finals to build a comfortable 122-pin lead over qualifying leader Keith Lesko from Prosper, Texas. Schissler’s 188-183 win over Lesko in the final position round match allowed Williams to advance to second. Schissler finished the 15-game event with 3,406 total pins, including match play bonus pins, while Williams ended with a 3,280 pinfall total, 31 ahead of Lesko.

 

The PBA Southwest Region will visit Hilltop Lanes for the PBA50 Waxahachie Southwest Open Oct. 19-21.

 

PBA50 JUNCTION CITY SOUTHWEST/MIDWEST OPEN I

Junction City Bowl, Junction City, Kan., Saturday

 

Championship: ss-Mark Williams ($1,200), Beaumont, Texas, def. Steven Badovinac ($750), Parker, Colo., 224-192.

Semifinal Round (best of three games. Losers eliminated, earn $500)
Badovinac def. n-Felix Garcia, Aurora, Colo., 2-0.
Williams, Beaumont, Texas, def. Brian Menini, Brookfield, Mo., 2-1.

Round of 6 (best of three games. Losers eliminated, earn $450)
Garcia def. David Williams Jr., Omaha, Neb., 2-0.
Menin def. Randy Peterson, Carrington, N.D., 2-1

.

Round of 8 (best of three games. Losers eliminated, earn $400)

Williams Jr. def. Wayne Stellick , Aurora, Colo., 2-1.
Menini def. Keith Lesko Prosper, Texas, 2-0.

 

 

PBA50 JUNCTION CITY SOUTHWEST/MIDWEST OPEN II, presented by Radical

Junction City Bowl, Junction City, Kan., Sunday

 

Final Match Play Standings (after 15 games, including match play bonus pins):

1, Ricky Schissler, Brighton, Colo., 7-1, 3,406, $1,200. 2, ss-Mark Williams, Beaumont, Texas, 5-2-1, 3,280, $700. 3, Keith Lesko, Prosper, Texas, 2-6, 3,249, $525. 4, Jeff Johnson, Freeport, Ill., 4-4, 3,236, $475. 5, n-ss-David Pritts, Salina, Kan., 5-3, 3,205, $450. 6, ss-Mike Dias, Lafayette, Colo., 4-4, 3,170, $430. 7, Scott Merritt, Iowa City, Iowa, 1-6-1, 3,113, $415. 8, Martin Bedford, Gasport, N.Y., 3-5, 3,106, $400.

 

n-denotes non-PBA member; ss- denotes PBA50 player (60-and-older)

300 game- Randy Peterson

K-State Mourns the Passing of Fred “Tex” Winter

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Legendary Kansas State men’s basketball coach Fred “Tex” Winter passed away on Wednesday (October 10) at the age of 96 in Manhattan, Kansas. Memorial services are pending.

 

A multiple Hall of Fame inductee, including the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in Kansas City in 2010 and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011, Winter spent more than six decades coaching both college and professional basketball, which included his famous stint as an assistant coach to famed head coach Phil Jackson on 11 NBA Championship teams with the Chicago Bulls (1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997 and 1998) and the Los Angeles Lakers (1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2009).

 

In addition, Winter won more than 500 games as a head coach, which included stints at Marquette (1951-53), Kansas State (1954-68), Washington (1969-72), the NBA’s Houston Rockets (1972-74), Northwestern (1975-78) and Long Beach State (1978-83). In total, he won 454 games in college, while he went 51-78 with the Rockets.

 

An innovator of the “Triangle Offense,” Winter earned a reputation as one of the most creative offensive coaches in the land, and in 1962, published a book on the offense entitled The Triple-Post Offense.

 

A native of Huntington Park, California, Winter’s ties to K-State began in 1947 when he became the first full-time assistant to head coach Jack Gardner. After helping Gardner and the Wildcats to 76 wins and two Final Four appearances from 1947-51, he became the youngest coach in the nation at Marquette, where he guided the Warriors to the National Catholic Championship in his first season.

 

Winter succeeded Gardner as head coach in 1953, leading K-State to some of its greatest successes on the basketball court. He led the Wildcats to a 261-118 (.689) record from 1954 to 1968, which included eight Big Seven/Eight Conference titles, five Big Seven/Eight Holiday Tournament crowns, six NCAA Tournament appearances and two Final Fours (1959 and 1964). His 261 wins rank second all-time in school history behind Jack Hartman’s 295, while his .689 winning percentage ranks third.

 

Winter also laid claim to more conference titles (eight) than any other head coach in the program’s history, while his teams finished among the Top 20 nationally nine times in his 15 seasons, including No. 1 in both polls in 1958-59. He is the only person to be affiliated with all four of K-State’s Final Four teams (1948, 1951, 1959 and 1964).

 

There were several outstanding teams under Winter, two of which advanced to the Final Four. He won four consecutive conference championships from 1957 to 1961, including earning the school’s first No. 1 ranking during the 1957-58 season, while he won back-to-back crowns in 1962-64 and then another in his final season in 1967-68.  The 1957-58 squad, anchored by All-Americans Bob Boozer and Jack Parr, lost just three games in the regular season, advancing to the school’s third Final Four. The Wildcats lost to Seattle and Temple in the Final Four.

 

In addition to his induction in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, Winter is also a member of the state of Kansas and Kansas State University Sports Halls of Fame.

 

The university honored Winter in January 2015 with the naming of “Tex Winter Drive,” which leads to Bramlage and the Ice Family Basketball Center on the east at Gate 7 off Kimball Avenue.

 

Winter is survived his wife, Nancy, and sons, BrianChris (wife, Kim) and Russ, and three grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his mother, Theo, father, Marion, twin sister, Mona Frances, brother, Ernest, and sister, Elizabeth Winter Green.

 

Statements from Kansas State Athletics:

 

Director of Athletics Gene Taylor

“Today is a sad day for not only Kansas State University but also the entire basketball world with the passing of Coach Winter. He transformed the game of basketball at all levels and will always remain an integral piece of our rich basketball tradition here at K-State. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Winter family during this time. He will certainly be missed by the entire K-State family.”

 

Head Men’s Basketball Coach Bruce Weber

“We are saddened by the passing of such a legendary coach in Fred “Tex” Winter, who touched nearly every level of basketball. Obviously, he is known for his success as an assistant to Phil Jackson with the Bulls and Lakers during their run to 11 NBA titles. However, he left a tremendous mark of achievement at Kansas State, including two Final Fours. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife,Nancy, his children, BrianChris and Russ, and grandchildren during this difficult time.”

 

– www.k-statesports.com –

————
TOM GILBERT
Director for Men’s Basketball Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

Annual Cats for Cans Drive is Saturday

Photo courtesy of K-State Athletics

MANHATTAN – The Kansas State Athletics Department will hold its 23rd-annual Cats for Cans food drive during Saturday’s home football game against Oklahoma State. Fans are encouraged to help the K-State Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) fight hunger in Manhattan by participating in the food drive by bringing canned foods or cash donations to the game.

Wildcat student-athletes will begin collecting donations two hours prior to the 11 a.m. kickoff in the parking lot and at all stadium entrances. In addition, fans can drop off items throughout the week with locations at Dillons, Hy-Vee and Wal-Mart in Manhattan.

All proceeds from the event will go to the Flint Hills Breadbasket in Manhattan. The Breadbasket assists in providing meals for over 2,000 families throughout Manhattan and the surrounding area, especially throughout the holiday season.

This year’s goal is 5,000 pounds of goods and $12,000 worth of monetary donations.

Cats for Cans is just one of many community service projects that allow Kansas State student-athletes to give back to the community in a positive and influential way.

 

 

KENNY LANNOU
Sr. Associate A.D. for Communications and Public Relations | K-State Athletics

Chiefs Move to Prime Time on October 21st

CINCINNATI (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs got a sixth prime time game when the NFL moved their home game on Sunday, Oct. 21 against the Cincinnati Bengals to the night slot.

The Chiefs are one of only two 5-0 teams, along with the Rams. The Bengals and the Saints are 4-1.

The Chiefs beat the Broncos 27-23 in a Monday night game Oct. 1. They also have a Monday night game against the Rams on Nov. 19, Sunday night games against the Patriots and Seahawks, and a Thursday night game against the Chargers.

Cincinnati had only one prime time game originally scheduled, a 34-23 win over the Ravens on Thursday, Sept. 13. Cincinnati is 6-14 in prime time games since 2011, including 0-5 on Sunday night.

Cats Host Cowboys on Homecoming in Manhattan

Kansas State returns to Manhattan on Saturday looking to snap a three-game losing skid as the Wildcats host Oklahoma State in the annual observance of Homecoming. The game will kick at 11 a.m., at Bill Snyder Family Stadium.

A LOOK AT K-STATE

  • K-State fell to 2-4 on the year following a 37-34 heartbreaker at Baylor in a game that saw the Wildcat offense rush for a season-best 319 yards.
  • K-State has played both Skylar Thompson and Alex Delton this season, with Thompson earning starts in five. Thompson played the entirety of last week’s game at Baylor, throwing for 149 yards and a score and running for one.
  • The running game is solidified by the Wildcats’ leading rusher a year ago, Alex Barnes, who is third in the Big 12 at 101.2 yards per game. He ran for a career-best 250 yards at Baylor, the fifth-most in a game in school history, while recording three touchdowns on the day.
  • Wide receiver Isaiah Zuber has tallied his first two career 100-yard receiving games this year, going for 144 yards against UTSA and 133 at West Virginia. He also caught the game-winning touchdown pass late in the game against South Dakota and returned a punt 85 yards for a score against the Coyotes.
  • Defensively, K-State recorded four sacks, eight tackles for loss and two interceptions on the day in last week’s loss to Baylor.
  • K-State has held three of its last four opponents without a rushing score.
  • Senior safety Eli Walker (41) and junior linebacker Da’Quan Patton (37) lead the team with 78 combined tackles, while Reggie Walker has a team-best 4.5 sacks and 5.5 tackles for loss.
  • Eli Walker, who has 31 tackles over the last three games, is 19th nationally in solo tackles per game (5.8), while Reggie Walker is second in the Big 12 in sacks.
  • Senior defensive back Duke Shelley is fifth on the team with 27 tackles and has nine passes defended, the latter tying for third in the Big 12 and 14th nationally.

A LOOK AT OKLAHOMA STATE

  • Oklahoma State heads into the game with a 4-2 overall record following a 48-42 loss to Iowa State at home.
  • The Cowboys are averaging 44.0 points per game through six games and 523.3 yards of total offense with 309.8 of those coming through the air.
  • Quarterback Taylor Cornelius has thrown for 1,830 yards and 16 touchdowns with Tylan Wallace and Tyron Johnson combining for 52 catches and seven touchdowns. Justice Hill is second in the Big 12 in rushing, averaging 107.2 yards per game with seven scores.
  • On defense, the Cowboys are led by Justin Phillips’ 42 tackles and Jordan Brailford’s 9.0 sacks and 12.5 tackles for loss.A LOOK AT THE SERIES
  • Oklahoma State leads the all-time series, 25-39, but the series is tied, 7-7, since the Big 12 began in 1996.
  • Games between the Wildcats and Cowboys have been hotly contested as of late with eight of the last 11 games being decided by a touchdown or less.
  • The Wildcats earned a 45-40 win over the 10th-ranked Cowboys in Stillwater last season, the first win at OSU since 1999.
  • In that game, Skylar Thompson threw for 204 yards and three touchdowns, while he ran for another.
  • The last time in Manhattan, Oklahoma State earned a 43-37 victory in 2016. The Wildcats held a 37-28 lead midway through the fourth quarter, but the Cowboys scored 15 unanswered points, including a touchdown and a two-point conversion with under two minutes left.SUSTAINABLE SUCCESS
  • Kansas State is in rare company in college football as the Wildcats rank in the top 20 in wins among FBS programs over the last 23 seasons.
  • Since 1995, K-State has picked up 193 victories, which ranks 19th in the nation.
  • The only current Big 12 teams to rank higher are Oklahoma (3rd; 224), Texas (12th; 208) and TCU (t15th; 199).

 

RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football and Golf Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

 

 

Chiefs Improve to 5-0

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Patrick Mahomes had finally thrown an interception, the first all season for the Chiefs’ talented young quarterback, and the Jacksonville offense had shuffled back onto the field.

The Chiefs immediately strip-sacked Blake Bortles to take the ball right back.

Their beleaguered defense also picked off Bortles four times and sacked him five, and Chris Jones took one of those interceptions back for a touchdown, proving during a 30-14 romp over Jacksonville on a soggy Sunday at Arrowhead Stadium that the Chiefs are more than just an offensive dynamo.

“It shows what kind of team we are,” said Mahomes, who finished with 313 yards passing and ran for a touchdown. “I’m just excited to come out with a win on a day the defense made plays.”

Oh, the league’s highest-scoring offense still made plays.

Kareem Hunt ran for 87 yards and a touchdown, and Travis Kelce hauled in five catches for 100 yards, helping the Chiefs (5-0) move the ball at will against the NFL’s top-rated defense.

Tyreek Hill, who was frequently matched up with the Jaguars’ Jalen Ramsey in an entertaining one-on-one affair, added four catches for 61 yards as the Chiefs rolled up 424 yards total.

“That play calling was something I’ve never seen before,” said the Jaguars’ Tashaun Gipson, who picked off Mahomes before leaving with a groin injury. “Tip your hat to them. Obviously, the offensive personnel they’ve got — they came out here and they beat us.”

The game eventually grew into a testy affair, resulting in a pair of ejections.

 

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